David Johnson (Canadian runner)

David Moffat Johnson (April 30, 1902 January 3, 1973) was a Canadian athlete and diplomat.

Early life

David Johnson was born in 1902 in Lachine, Quebec. He studied at McGill and after graduating with an arts degree in 1923, he became the first McGill athlete to earn a Rhodes scholarship to the University of Oxford in England.

Sportsman

Johnson was a star athlete at McGill University[1] in Montreal, where he led the varsity track and field team to four consecutive championships in the 1920s.

He was also an Olympian, as Canada's top track runner at the Olympic Games of 1924 in Paris. He finished fourth in two events, including the 400-metre race that was won by Scotland's Eric Liddell. The race was immortalised in the film Chariots of Fire and was recorded in contemporary newsreel:[2] Johnson's maple-leaf emblem standing out clearly on the inside lane. In October, 2007, he was posthumously inducted into the McGill Sports Hall of Fame.

Diplomat

David Johnson had a successful diplomatic career, being posted to: Ireland, Pakistan, New York, Vietnam and the USSR. In New York, Johnson was Canada's Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations (UN). In Vietnam, Johnson was the Canadian Commissioner and Permanent Representative for the International Control Commission (ICC).[3]

Johnson died in 1973.

gollark: Which doesn't make them sensible *now*, when people can cook things and nobody cares about mixed fabrics.
gollark: Very approximately?
gollark: Oh, the arbitrary rules are arbitrary too.
gollark: I haven't read very much of it because I really enjoy modern fiction and such more.
gollark: Or, well, God ordering that.

References


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